Buyer Persona Template

A Marketer’s
Template
for Creating
Buyer Personas
Table of Contents
1
A Brief Introduction to Buyer Personas
2
What to Include in Your Buyer Persona
3
Examples of Complete Buyer Personas
1
A Brief
Introduction
to Buyer
Personas
What Are Buyer
Personas?
?
Buyer personas are fictional representations of your ideal customers.
They are based on real data about customer demographics and
online behavior, along with educated speculation about their
personal histories, motivations, and concerns.
How Are Buyer
Personas Created?
?
Buyer personas are created through research, surveys, and interviews of
your target audience. That includes a mix of customers – both “good”
and “bad” -- prospects, and those outside of your contact database who
might align with your target audience. You’ll collect data that is both
qualitative and quantitative to paint a picture of who your ideal customer
is, what they value, and how your solution fits into their daily lives.
Use This Template!
That’s why we’ve created this handy-dandy PowerPoint – so you can
quickly explain your buyer persona and disseminate that information
across the organization in a palatable, organized format. This
template will walk you through how to input and format the
information you’ve collected about your persona in a way that’s
extremely easy for your entire company to understand. And since your
research is already done, this is the easy part!
2
What to
Include in
Your Buyer
Persona
Company ABC
Buyer Persona Overview
Month, Year
Persona Name
BACKGROUND:
• Basic details about persona’s role
• Key information about the persona’s
company
• Relevant background info, like
education or hobbies
DEMOGRAPHICS:
• Gender
• Age Range
• HH Income (Consider a spouse’s
income, if relevant)
• Urbanicity (Is your persona urban,
suburban, or rural?)
IDENTIFIERS:
• Buzz words
• Mannerisms
Persona Name
GOALS:
• Persona’s primary goal
• Persona’s secondary goal
CHALLENGES:
• Primary challenge to persona’s
success
• Secondary challenge to persona’s
success
HOW WE HELP:
• How you solve your persona’s
challenges
• How you help your persona achieve
goals
Persona Name
REAL QUOTES:
• Include a few real quotes –
taken during your interviews –
that represent your persona
well. This will make it easier for
employees to relate to and
understand your persona.
COMMON OBJECTIONS:
• Identify the most common
objections your persona will
raise during the sales process.
Persona Name
MARKETING MESSAGING:
• How should you describe
your solution to your
persona?
ELEVATOR PITCH:
• Make describing your
solution simple and
consistent across everyone
in your company.
3
Examples
of Complete
Buyer
Personas
Partner Pam
BACKGROUND:
• Partner of our ideal customer
• Has worked the same part-time job for 10
years.
• Married with 2 children (10 and 12)
DEMOGRAPHICS:
• Skews female
• Age 30-45
• Dual HH Income: $140,000
• Suburban
IDENTIFIERS:
• Let’s her partner think he wears the pants
• The gatekeeper of your customer’s weekend
plans
• Wants to know more about partners activities
Partner Pam
Where she gets information:
• Friends and Family
• Facebook and Pinterest
CHALLENGES:
• Staying motivated when every
day life seems routine
• Planning activities the whole
family will enjoy
HOW WE HELP:
• Ensure scuba diving is safe
• Add some spice to life
• Give her something interesting
to post on Facebook
Partner Pam
REAL QUOTES:
• “I’m not sure I can dive, my ears pop
when I fly in an airplane.”
• “How will I be able to communicate if I
have a problem underwater if I can’t
talk down there?”
• “I’m just getting certified so I won’t be
left behind.”
COMMON OBJECTIONS:
• I’m not sure how you scuba dive and
not die. It seems dangerous.
• I don’t want my partner to spend our
expendable income on something I
don’t enjoy.
Sample Sally
MARKETING MESSAGING:
• Diving is a safe sport that is fun for
the whole family
ELEVATOR PITCH:
• Bring some excitement into your
routine by learning to dive. Scuba is
an activity the whole family can do
together.
example of a software company’s persona description for a digital camera user
Katie Bennett
Thirty-two-year-old Katie would have gone into fine art if she felt she could have
made a living at it; now she runs the business side of her husband’s small landscaping
firm and saves her creative ambitions for the weekend.
A couple of years ago, Katie bought a pocket digital camera so she could post
photos of completed jobs on the company’s Web site, which she put together using
iWeb on her Mac. As she started experimenting with getting the best images,
Katie realized that photography offered many of the creative opportunities she
enjoyed in painting. She was hooked. Looking for a more capable camera that
wouldn’t break the bank, Katie went to CNET.com for advice. After looking at a
few comparisons but not reading detailed reviews, she went to the nearest Best
Buy and bought a Nikon D70 with its kit lens and an inexpensive tripod, relegating
her compact camera to snapshots at family events. She also considered
Canon’s Digital Rebel, but chose the Nikon because it “felt more like a professional
camera.”
Katie got home and sat down with her new camera and its somewhat intimidating
manual. After half an hour of fiddling, she was overwhelmed by the options
and decided to give the auto mode a try. Katie started hiking about on weekends
to shoot landscapes, from sweeping skylines to dew-covered flowers. She was
pleased with some of her shots, but wondered why some weren’t much better
than what she could do with the pocket camera; many did not meet her expectations.
After reading a few issues of Outdoor Photographer, she decided she
might do better with different lenses. Confused by all the letters, numbers, and
lens specifications, Katie went to the local specialty camera shop for advice on
which macro and wide-angle lenses to buy; she did not expect the staff at Best
Buy to provide good advice. She was reluctant to buy the cheaper lenses made
by other manufacturers because surely Nikon would make the best lenses for
their own cameras.
Katie is thrilled with her new ability to capture images of the local flora as she
would have composed them on canvas. Though Katie enjoys it when people
admire her photos, she’s more motivated by the satisfaction of achieving her own
creative vision. She can now capture the compositions she wants, but still isn’t
quite happy with some of her photos.
Katie gets up early on Saturdays to catch dramatic sunrises, frequents every park
and beach in the area, and takes the occasional day trip. She loves the excuse to
get out into nature. She goes out equipped with her camera, lenses, tripod, and a
couple of 4 GB memory cards. Katie takes 100 to 300 shots on the average outing.
She can often take her time composing a shot because plants and scenery
don’t move much, but sometimes needs to move quickly to capture a butterfly
perched on a flower, or a shaft of light coming through the clouds just so. She
usually takes a photo on the auto settings first, pointing the auto focus at the
area where she wants to capture detail in the hope that this will set the correct
exposure. She then dials the aperture up and down and takes a couple of shots
to bracket the exposure; she read about this technique in her magazine. She still
gets overly dark areas or blown-out highlights in many photos; she’s increasingly
frustrated by the intricacies of correct exposure. She deletes the worst photos
from the camera on the spot.
Katie brings her camera home and plugs it into her Mac using the USB cable.
She dumps the images into iPhoto and sees what she can learn from the bad
ones before deleting them. She makes a few minor adjustments, but is generally
reluctant to manipulate her photos, believing she should be able to get the right
image in the camera to begin with. She posts her favorites on her personal Web
site, uses them on her computer desktop, and occasionally orders large prints of
especially good images via iPhoto. Katie feels a bit limited by iPhoto’s organization
options, but appreciates its ease of use and integration with other tools.
Katie is considering upgrading to a higher resolution camera, but is reluctant to
spend the money unless she knows she can get the results she wants.
Katie’s goals:
— Be able to capture what she sees in her “mind’s eye.” Katie knows she
has an eye for composition, but is frustrated when her inability to master
difficult lighting makes for a lackluster photo.
— Enjoy the scenery. Katie takes photos of nature as a way to enjoy its
beauty. She doesn’t want to be so focused on the mechanics of using her
camera that she forgets to enjoy what she sees.
— Feel like a “real” photographer. Katie is proud of some of her images,
but hesitates to think of herself as a photographer because she feels she
hasn’t mastered some of the fundamentals.
SOURCE: Designing for the Digital Age:
How to create products and Services
by Kim Goodwin
example of a phone company’s persona description for a business owner.
Tim Wilson, CEO
Five years ago, Tim turned his favorite pastime into a full-time job: BeSpoke
Bikes, which is now a fast-growing custom cycle shop in Berkeley, California.
BeSpoke’s 36 employees include a small management team, a couple of designers,
a few support staff, a half-dozen customer service reps who take orders and
other inquiries, and the crew of the small manufacturing facility across town.
BeSpoke’s office phone system is separate from the manufacturing facility, which
makes for some awkwardness in forwarding calls. The customer service team is
set up on a hunt group for incoming calls (though Tim doesn’t know that’s what
it’s called), but the increasing volume of calls is overwhelming this simple solution.
The existing system is also expensive to maintain because Kevin, the jackofall-trades IT manager, is no expert in telephony; he has to place a $75 service
call just to move an extension.
Tim knows it’s time to replace the phone system but wants to make a good
investment. Tim has heard that IP phone systems are cheaper and more flexible.
He knows that quality products and good service can cost a little more, though,
so he’s looking for the best investment rather than the cheapest option. Kevin is
investigating vendors, but Tim is as hands-on with his business as he is with his
bikes—he doesn’t trust such a critical decision to anyone else.
Tim’s goals:
— Invest wisely. Like many small business owners, Tim is torn between investing
for the long term and keeping today’s costs low. He wants a good
system BeSpoke won’t outgrow in a couple of years, but doesn’t want to
pay for capabilities or components he doesn’t need yet.
— Maintain flexibility. Tim thinks he knows what features are important,
but is aware that his communication needs could change as his business
changes.
— Minimize business disruption. Tim wants to avoid the painful installation
and the week or so of technical problems they had when the current system
was installed.
SOURCE: Designing for the Digital Age:
How to create products and Services
by Kim Goodwin
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helped your sales and marketing efforts?
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